"Living a truly ethical life, putting the needs of others first, and providing for their happiness has tremendous implications for society." -Dalai Lama

"Peace requires the simple but powerful recognition that what we have in common as human beings is more important and crucial than what divides us." -Sargent Shriver

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Just Call Me "Jane" :A month of monkeying around

Come one, come all! To hear about my
month!

So I've had a pretty great past month!
To kick it all off, I got to see my entire training class at our
Close of Service Conference, or in PC lingo COS Conference. We spent
an entire week eating Indian food, being weird with friends, and
talking about our nearing returns to “Merica! Peace Corps puts us
up at this super nice resort on the beach and treats us right. I
guess they are making up for 2 years of dirt and grime? It was so
surreal to talk about our end of service. Is 2 years seriously
already up? Sometimes I'm not so sure I'm ready to return to the
real world.

After COS Conference, we headed on to
the capital of Tanzania, Dodoma. Tanzania is a very odd place in the
fact that their capital is pretty lame. After the switch of
capitals, all of the embassies and important buildings stayed behind
in Dar es Salaam, making parliament the only peeps to move. All the
same, we had fun, eating Italian, pizza, and chinese and catching up
on laundry. Dodoma will also be the home of my dear, cool friend,
Kathryn, and she was able to see where she will live and work. We
also discovered one of her town crazies, a man that daily runs down
the street into oncoming traffic, blowing a whistle, and carrying a
hoe...we shall call him “Crazy Whistling Suicide Running Man.”
After we'd eaten our way around Dodoma, we headed north west by way
of Singida.

Now there isn't a whole lot in Singida,
but I like it. It has a weird, desolate terrain with huge, random
boulders that reminds me of some alien landscape. It also has this
one bar where the owner, Baba Raziki, treats you well. He fills you
to the brim with roasted goat and ugali and scares away all the
creeps. Basically, he's just precious. After our one night in
Singida, we went to the bus stand for our “9:00” bus. Not too
surprisingly, we were on the road again around 11:00. I do have to
say that I have never seen cockroaches on a bus before. It is kinda
the last thing you expect to skitter across the aisle and adds a
certain element of nasty to the ride. Speaking of nasty, there was
also a mama that tried to get her son to poop in a bag in the aisle
and missed, resulting in one messy aisle. Anywho, 7 short hours
later, we arrived in Mwanza, home of Lake Victoria.

Lake Victoria...that pile o' rocks is Bismark Rocks

As it was getting dark, we found a
guest house, ran and got some food, and returned to the promise of
hot showers. The first person's shower was too cold. Lucky enough,
my shower, the second, was just right. And breaking from Goldilock's
trend, the third shower was not too hot. It was just plain
explosive. Some apparently important piece of the faucet broke and
instead of a rainfall of pleasant water, Kathryn got a face-full of
fire hydrant'esqe water. We then had a show down with the drunk
employees of the guest house, resulting in a woman trying to kiss
Kathryn in the shower and lots of yelling. This ended in a
depressing bucket bath for Kathryn and the bleak promise that the
problem would be fixed the next morning. Surprisingly, this did
happen. Hazzah for showers! The next couple of days, we hung out
and did what Peace Corps volunteers do, eat. We also had a couple
more friends meet up with us and we had us a gay ol' time with good
food and okay drinks. After our couple days of relaxing and gazing
upon Lake Victoria, we were on the move. Can't get too comfortable,
can we? Saturday morning, we were in the cab at 3 a.m and at the bus
stand by 3:30 a.m. By 4 a.m, we were loaded on our bus. At 4:01
a.m, I was passed out and woke only briefly to realize we were being
ferried across part of Lake Victoria, not waking again until around
6:30. So you always feel dirty after bus rides, but after 15 hours
busing down red dirt roads, we looked like the cast of “Jersey
Shores.” You probably could have drawn designs in our layers of
dirt. Despite being dirty and tired, we had arrived in Kigoma on the
shores of Lake Tanganyika. After much needed showers and a night's
sleep, we walked around figuring out our next move. We were hoping
to go to Gombe Stream on Sunday, but due to no ferry running, we hung
out at Jacobson's Beach. Now if you ever find yourself in western
Tanzania, you should definitely swing by this beach. Its a little
secluded cove with crystal clear water and red sand. It was
beautiful and relaxing and gave me a real hillbilly place to wash my
shirt from the bus ride the day before. Don't judge me!

Jacobson's Beach

Vervet monkey friends at the beach

On Monday,
we made our way to Gombe Stream. Gombe Steam is on the shores of
Lake Tanganyika and is the site where Jane Goodall did her chimp
research. The research is amazingly still ongoing, being called home
by the fifth generation of chimpanzee researchers. It really was an
incredible experience. We had to hike for 6 hours, but we found a
family group of about 15 chimps and got to observe them for a while,
including watching them eat a Red Colobus Monkey. All I have to say
is I could eat that baby chimp up with a spoon is was so cute! Also,
in the camp, the monkey fun didn't end. We were sharing our quarters
with the baboons. Now that sounds more fun than it actually is.
Being the cheap volunteers we are, we brought all of our own food.
This included bread for lunches and breakfasts. Our very first
morning, we were sitting down to a lovely breakfast of bread,
bananas, and peanut butter, when all of a sudden, a big ol' mama
baboon with a baby on her belly runs in the door. For a second, we
all froze, staring into the eyes of pure evil, or a hungry baboon if
you don't want to be too dramatic. Then, she made the move, jumping
onto our table sending us all flying to the other corner, watching
helplessly as she grabbed out bread and ran out the door. So in
about 5 seconds flat, we lost about half of our food to the grabby
paws of that baboon-terror. Observing all of this was a cute little
Canadian family. Now I've always been told that Canadians are
insanely nice, and by told I mean that I love “How I Met Your
Mother” and they always talk about that. Now, I believe! After
our long hike, we return tired and a little hungry to find that the
Canadians had bought a replacement loaf and left it for us like a
bunch of bread-fairies! It was the best surprise ever! After all of
the excitement of Gombe Stream, we returned to civilization and
boarded LV Liemba, bound for Kisanga on the southern shores of
Tanganyika.

Ferry to Gombe Stream

﻿

Our empty breadbag...pictured with who I can only assume was an accomplice to the crime

Hike break

Making our way to the chimps

Found em!

1-year-old peewee

2-year-old peewee

Hooray for friends!

This boat was originally build by the
Germans during World World II and now serves as a ferry from the
north part of the lake to the south. Seeing as there were five of
us, 2 got a first class cabin and 3 got a second class cabin,
thinking there would be enough space for us all to hang out in the
bigger second class cabin. We were not wrong about that, but what we
didn't realize before hand was there would be no air flow down in the
second class cabin, or shall I call it the fiery doorstep of Hades.
It was hot. In order to get any sleep, I slept with my feet sticking
out of the porthole by my bed. Our 48 hours on the boat was overall
cooler and fun, though. We read and played cards and made new
friends, arriving to our destination without sinking to our watery
grave! I know its probably irrational, but that is my fear in
Tanzania. I instinctively plan my escape and locate all flotation
devices. I've seen the state that the buses are in in Tanzania and
truly believe that this fear is not just me being dramatic.

My porthole

Life boats

The majestic LV Liemba

Upon arrival in Kasanga, we made plans
to visit Kalambo Falls the next day. Kalambo Falls are the second
highest single drop waterfall in Africa, plunging about 215 meters.
After a boat ride and few hours hiking, we arrived to a breathtaking
view and a hoard of gnats, ready to coat out sweaty bodies. After
fighting off gnats long enough to eat a snack and take a somewhat
acceptable picture, we made our way back to our guest house. The
next morning, we had another fun 17.5 hours of travel, we arrived in
chilly Mbeya, where we are now recovering and licking our wounds,
preparing for our returns home. Overall, an incredible month of
travel and time with friends. Basically, I love my job.

Disclaimer

My home for the next 27 Months

About Me

My name is Katie an I am originally from small town Oklahoma. After graduating, I felt the need to take part in something bigger than myself, therefore I joined the Peace Corps. I am now teaching high school Biology and Chemistry in Tanzania.